the national osteoporosis society · 2019. 1. 11. · 13% of vertebral fractures are not reported...
TRANSCRIPT
“Closing the care gap to prevent the
next fracture: The UK experience.”
MK Javaid
Associate Professor in Metabolic Bone Disease, University of Oxford
Hon Consultant Rheumatologist, Nuffield Orthopaedic Centre
Declarations
In last five years received honoraria, travel and/or subsistence expenses from:
• Amgen, Eli Lilly, Medtronic, Norvartis, Proctor and Gamble, Servier, Shire, Internis, Consilient Health, Stirling Anglia Pharmaceuticals, Mereo Biopharma, Optasia
Clinical lead for RCP FLS database audit
Aims
• UK care gap
• FLS challenges
• Quality improvement
More than 80% of patients after a seeing a doctor with a fragility fracture
receive inadequate care.
Prescriptions 0-6 months prior Prescriptions 0-4 months post
10% to 14% 15% to 19% 20% to 24% 25% to 29% 30% to 34%
Shah 2016 OI Accepted
Incident prescriptions of all anti resorptives before and after hip fracture
What are the barriers?
Prioritization for UK health care system-
Reduce Premature Mortality in young
Prevent Avoidable Morbidity in elderly
In 35 years: 30% increase in >65yr 100% increase in >85yr
Overwhelm health systems Divert investment away from younger > URGENT need to address and prevent avoidable fractures
A post menopausal woman who has already
had a fracture after the age of 45….
Benefits of
treatment
= Current risk &
drug effect
Risk of treatment
harm and
inconvenience
Is your risk higher compared with women
of the same age without a fracture?
Siris 2011 OI
36%
YES
Low awareness of osteoporosis and fragility fracture in the UK
Jha JBMR 2015; van der Velde Bone 2016
UK Incident Use of Alendronate
ONJ lawsuit
Atr Fib AIM
Television AFF and BP
80% reduction
Isn’t effectiveness obvious?
Andrew Judge
M Kassim Javaid, Cyrus Cooper, Nigel Arden, Dani Prieto-Alhambra, Andrew Farmer, Janet Lippett, Rachael Gooberman-Hill, Jose Leal, Jasroop Chana,
Alastair Gray, Michael Goldacre, Laura Graham, Sam Hawley, Sally Sheard, Sarah Drew
Regional Evaluation of Fracture Reduction Services after hip Fracture
(REFRESH)
Hospital coding: Primary hip fractures at 11 hospitals
What was the effect of FLS on re-fracture rates?
Hospital 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 Total
1 255 252 298 304 341 367 344 321 347 286 3,115
2 413 380 376 374 431 375 403 386 422 384 3,944
3 178 185 183 90 199 241 205 217 179 181 1,858
4 133 165 248 330 300 341 335 327 327 313 2,819
5 198 172 165 158 171 183 189 190 209 202 1,837
6 62 69 80 94 109 22 125 105 131 233 1,030
7 583 580 543 583 662 550 584 601 622 587 5,895
8 488 473 487 472 527 529 504 464 510 483 4,937
9 189 201 194 204 158 209 211 210 202 216 1,994
10 400 412 427 435 412 400 416 404 476 436 4,218
11 142 152 135 134 173 151 160 176 154 129 1,506
Total 3,041 3,041 3,136 3,178 3,483 3,368 3,476 3,401 3,579 3,450 33,153
Hawley Age & Aging 2016
Findings: second fracture within 2-years before and after FLS implementation
Hawley Age & Aging 2016
Unable to detect a change in hip re-fracture rates after introduction of an FLS with over 33,000 hip fractures
Observational study: Before/ after time series design
Hip fractures – “too late”
No FLS delivered monitoring
Services pre-dated FLS standards
Hawley Age & Aging 2016; Drew OI 2016;
Qualitative study– “Adherence is a major issue”
Not every FLS is automatically effective
IOF standards
Aim: 1. Set the standard for FLS
2. Guidance
3. Benchmarking and fine-tuning
5 domains, 13 standards
- Hip fracture patients
- Inpatient
- Outpatient
- Vertebral fracture patient
- Organization
Akesson OI 2013
Different Hospitals
Identify
Investigate
Initiate
Monitor
As part of trauma visit
Invite to separate appointment
DXA scan Availability
Who does/ pays for bloods
Ward patients
Clinic patients Orthopaedic Geriatrics
Medicine Emergency room
In person Lists/ IT
Prescribing records
Letter
Telephone
Email Clinic
Recommend to or Initiate treatment? Oral +/- injectables Affordability
of therapy
‘Ownership of patient’ Access to patient
Local decisions for an FLS > €€ vs. €€€€€€€€
b) More investment > higher benefit
c) Reach Plateau > then need
more to maximize benefit
d) Minimal benefit unless whole package
a) Minimum investment Maximum benefit
Key Steps in UK
Political Prioritization
Get
Funded
Get
Started
Improve and sustainable
Political Prioritization
Everyone had same message
Department of Health Prevention Package for Older People: Falls and Fractures - Effective
interventions in health and social care, 2009
Step 2
Political Prioritization
Get
Funded
Get
Started
Improve and sustainable
Who benefits vs. who pays?
• Benefit
– Community care / Social care
– Patients and family
• Costs
– Specific department in hospital
– Lower emergency admissions / income
– Regional health board
The saving: 5 year Oxford model
• Population of 620,000
UK National Osteoporosis Society Economics Benefit Calculator 2014
The cost: How big should the FLS be?
Identification is key
Naranjo OI 2015
Need to find them all.
24 hours pre-hip fracture network
May 2014
Minimally disruptive Intervention
Minimally disruptive Intervention
48 hours pre-discharge: having a fracture is a full time job
May 2014
48 hours pre-discharge: having a fracture is a full time job
May 2014
Fracture Liaison service
Minimally disruptive Intervention
Trauma
ward patient
UNDER 75 years
DXA
Assess & Treat
OVER 75 years
Assess & Treat
Recommend to Patient and GP
4 & 12 months Monitor
Community based
Hospital based
Trauma
clinic patient
FLS: Minimally disruptive Intervention
Invisible to Patient and
Trauma
Care close to home
Limit Extra visits
Letters telephone
PILOT – can it work in your hospital
• Plan
• Do
• Study
• Act
Orthopaedic
OT/PT
Plaster
Radiology
? FPS
Trauma nurse
Invisible to Patient and
Trauma
Monitoring
• Most important step
Adherence matters: UK CPRD
• 66,116 PMO women
Li Menopause 2012
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
< 4 months 12 months 24 months 36 months 60 months
Per
cen
tage
of
pat
ien
ts o
n a
nti
-ost
eop
oro
sis
dru
gs (
%)
Time since primary fracture (months)
2b) 2005-2013
East Midlands East of England London North East North West Northern Ireland Scotland South Central South East Coast South West Wales West Midlands Yorkshire & The Hum..
Shah OI accepted
Prescriptions post hip fracture: UK CPRD N= 13,069
White Fam Pract 2010
Statistical but minimal clinical effect on adherence
Poor adherence: then what?
• Non-adherence is no worse than other diseases.
• Minimal impact motivation
• Switch to intermittent
parenteral therapy?
Zoledronate
Denosumab
Hadji OI 2015
UK Key performance indicators
• Meaningful
• Measurable
• Fracture rates
• Re-fracture rates
• Time to first monitoring visit
• Number and % on anti-osteoporosis medication at 4 and 12 months
• Starting exercise within 4 months
…...from date fracture diagnosed in NHS
Oxford stakeholder map
Stakeholder
Mapping
1o
care
GPs
GP trainee
NurseDistrict
Practice
Advisor
Falls
Physio/Occupational
Therapy
Pharmacy
CCG
Board
Speciality GPs
Public HealthCCG-SU
Health + Wellbeing board
Social ServicesLocal Area teams
Patients
Carers
NOS
AgeUK
ArthiritisResearch
2o
care
TrustExecutive
Finance
General Manager
Directorate lead
Information
Audit
Coding
Activity
Appointment
DNA
KPI
Radiology/DXA
Department
Medicine
Trauma
Geriatrics
Rheum
Endo
Other
Step 3
Political Prioritization
Get
Funded
Get
Started
Improve and sustainable
staged implementation
Set up core service
Collect outcomes
Widen case mix
Staged implementation
Hip Fractures
+Other Inpatient Fractures
+Outpatient Fractures
+Vertebral Fractures
Case mix
Service scope
Database / Organizational
0 – seeing patients
1. Job banding, hours, start/ end date
2. Vacancy control forms
3. Adverts & Short listed
4. Interview panel
5. Notice
6. Contracts
7. Occupational health
8. Induction / FPP
9. Mandatory training
10. Apprenticeships
The longer you take to start the shorter the time
to demonstrate outcomes
6 month project manager Work with Local Patient group
Make sure your team are trained
Introduction Module 1 (Foundation) - Epidemiology of Osteoporosis - Section 1 – Definition - Section 2 – Incidence - Section 3 – Risk Factors Module 2 (Foundation) – Fracture Risk Assessment - Section 1 – Fracture Risk Assessment Tools - Section 2 – Nutritional Assessments - Section 3 – Bone Density Scanning (DXA) - Section 4 – Impact of Osteoporosis on the Body
Fracture Prevention Practitioner certification
o Foundation and Advanced
o Launch @ NOS 2014
o Web based podcast and assessment
Aims
Political Prioritization
Get
Funded
Get
Started
Improve and sustainable
FLS should perform FLS does perform
Process
• FLS-DB Facilities audit
• The FLS-DB audit – patient centred
Reported number of patients identified by FLS (n=52) vs estimated fragility fracture caseload
Most FLSs did not see as many patients as expected: 24% FLS >80% estimated
caseload
57% LFS < 50% caseload
FLSDB RCP report 2015
Service structure: FLS nurse time and Estimated fragility fractures
FLSDB RCP report 2015
Investigation: Standard panel? England
FLS n
England
FLS %
England
non FLS
n
England
non FLS
%
Wales
FLS n
Wales
FLS %
Wales
non FLS
n
Wales
non FLS
%
Renal function tests 41 85.4 19 73.1 4 100.0 1 25.0
Serum Calcium 40 83.3 18 69.2 4 100.0 1 25.0
Liver function tests 38 79.2 18 69.2 4 100.0 1 25.0
Full blood count 37 77.1 19 73.1 2 50.0 1 25.0
Serum alkaline phosphate 37 77.1 17 65.4 4 100.0 1 25.0
Serum phosphate 37 77.1 15 57.7 4 100.0 1 25.0
Thyroid function 37 77.1 16 61.5 4 100.0 1 25.0
Serum 25OH vitamin D 36 75.0 16 61.5 3 75.0 1 25.0
Erythrocyte sedimentation rate /
ESR Liver function29 60.4 9 34.6 1 25.0 1 25.0
Coeliac disease screen 28 58.3 6 23.1 3 75.0 1 25.0
Serum Electrophoresis for
myeloma screen27 56.3 15 57.7 4 100.0 1 25.0
Serum Parathyroid hormone 26 54.2 12 46.2 3 75.0 1 25.0
Testosterone/ Sex hormone
binding globulin24 50.0 9 34.6 4 100.0 1 25.0
C-reactive protein 20 41.7 11 42.3 2 50.0 0 0.0
Other 16 33.3 6 23.1 0 0.0 1 25.0
Missing 6 12.5 6 23.1 0 0.0 2 50.0
24 hour urinary calcium 3 6.3 2 7.7 0 0.0 0 0.0
Spot urinary calcium 3 6.3 1 3.8 0 0.0 0 0.0
Major trauma centre (n=625 hips)
General hospital (n=200 hips)
Specialist Orthopaedic (DXA)
30 miles bus/ train = 90 minutes
Oxford 3 hospital
Real time data
Real time data
Real time data
Real time data
A work in progress….
Management: more than osteoporosis medication
• Paracetamol
• Tramadol
• (NSAIDS)
• Opioid patches (3 days)
Bowel care
Physiotherapy
Interventional radiology
Translation to patient care
13% of vertebral fractures are not reported by radiologists1
35% of reports are noted by clinicians and alter patient care2
Vertebral fractures are the single most preventable fracture with current therapies (60 – 90%)3
1Williams Eur J Rad 2009, 2Freedman Spine J 2008, 3Freemantle OI 2013
Oxford audit
732 hip fracture patients
157 had previous imaging
65/157 had vertebral fracture(s)
30/65 (46%) mentioned in report
45/65 (54%) not reported
Strategy
• Training
• Audit
• Staged introduction
• Feedback
All patients with vertebral fragility fractures
Present with a fragility fracture
Have a VFA
FLS
Another presentation
Have spinal
imaging
Image shows vertebral fracture
Reported as vertebral fracture
Clinical service
Stage 1- VFA
ICSD 2015
All patients with vertebral fragility fractures
Present with a fragility fracture
Have a VFA
FLS
Another presentation
Have spinal
imaging
Image shows vertebral fracture
Reported as vertebral fracture
Clinical service
Stage 2- clinical referral
All patients with vertebral fragility fractures
Present with a fragility fracture
Have a VFA
FLS
Another presentation
Have spinal
imaging
Image shows vertebral fracture
Reported as vertebral fracture
Clinical service
Stage 3- Report scanning
Choose your words wisely
End plate depression
Vertebral deformity
Biconcave/ wedge deformity
Vertebral body height loss
vertebral body collapse
All patients with vertebral fragility fractures
Present with a fragility fracture
Have a VFA
FLS
Another presentation
Have spinal
imaging
Image shows vertebral fracture
Reported as vertebral fracture
Clinical service
Stage 3- Image scanning
?
Vertebral fracture list
All radiographs CT/ MR/ Pet-CT
in patients aged 50+
Search reports modified list
Searched positive
Given to FLS
Not already in FLS
On bone treatment
Image Exchange
Portal
Machine reading
Clinical Radiology
verification
Vertebral
fracture list sent to FLS
Not high trauma
Integration with FLS
Searched / screened
Negative
Screened
Monitoring pathway DXA/
Clinic
Screened positive
Yes
No
Falls
• Anti-osteoporosis Medication take >6 months to reduce fracture
• Falls interventions
– Timely
– Adhered to
• Strength and Balance exercise program • Medication review • Eye sight • Home Occupational therapy review
Help is at hand
? ? ? ?
? ?
? ? ? ? ? ?
?
5 site visits sponsored each year
2 workshops this year: Russia & Czech Republic
1. Describe the patient pathway
2. Find the GAPS
3. Find the solutions
4. How to get funded
5. How to start well
6. How to be sustainable
Aims of Mentoring: Achieving the FLS escalator
1. Describe the patient pathway
Hip
Other inpatients
Outpatients
Spine 2. Find the GAPS
3. Find the solutions
4. How to get funded
5. How to start well
6. How to be sustainable
Benefits
Costs
Patient Economic / Hospital Society / Family
Numbers Population Fracture typesSites Databases
clinical VFA Incidental
Identification Investigation Initiation Monitoring
BPT framework Priotization Stepwise escalation
Does it work?
Regional network
AIM:
Every patient with a fragility fracture
over the age of 50yr in South Central is:
1. Identified
2. Assessed
3. Treated effectively for at least five years
for both bone and falls health
A network of every bone clinician/ Nurse (11 hospitals)
Fracture Reduction in South Central PolicY group
Fracture Liaison Service > Fracture Prevention Service
What is the regional gap: 2009
What is the regional gap: 2015
Developed shared guidance
Who to assess Secondary Screen
DXA indications
Treatment thresholds
Tailored treatment initiation
Switching after adverse events
Switching after re-fracture
Monitoring frequency
Monitoring Questions
Atypical fractures
Vitamin D therapy
Renal disease
Treatment duration
Developed shared guidance
Who to assess Secondary Screen
DXA indications
Treatment thresholds
Tailored treatment initiation
Switching after adverse events
Switching after re-fracture
Monitoring frequency
Monitoring Questions
Atypical fractures
Vitamin D therapy
Renal disease
Treatment duration
SUMMARY
• UK Focus on secondary fracture prevention
– Multiple stakeholders > unified goal with patients
– Population approach not hospital based
– Start small and build up
– Use the CTF (toolkit, implementation team, events)
Oxford Team past and present:
Cooper, Arden, Wass, Willett, Carr, Price, Glyn-Jones, Hamdy, Ramasay
A Soni, K Leyland, S Sheard, R Warne, D Prieto Alhambra, A Judge, S Hawley,
R Pinedo-Villanueva, G Round, R Batra, A Kiran, D Hunter
RUDY team
A Turner
J Barrett
J Hogg
R Popert
D Grey
N Grey
H Teare
J Kaye
R Luqmani
P Wordsworth
MSK RD-TRC RUDY / GeCIP team Rajesh Thakker <[email protected]>, Shine Brian (RTH) OUH <[email protected]>, Faisal Ahmed <[email protected]>, Fadil Hannan <[email protected]>, Gittoes Neil (UNIVERSITY HOSPITALS BIRMINGHAM NHS FOUNDATION TRUST) <[email protected]>, Rheumatology JH Tobias <[email protected]>, Nicholas Shenker <[email protected]>, No Name Clunie <[email protected]>, Ken Poole <[email protected]>, Dr. Mike Stone <[email protected]>, RALSTON Stuart <[email protected]>, [email protected], Bockenhauer Detlef (GREAT ORMOND STREET HOSPITAL FOR CHILDREN NHS FOUNDATION TRUST) <[email protected]>, [email protected], [email protected], Peter Selby <[email protected]>, [email protected], No Name <[email protected]>, Eugene McCloskey <[email protected]>, [email protected] Cooper <[email protected]>, keen, richard keen <[email protected]>, [email protected], Paul Wordsworth <[email protected]>, Offiah Amaka <[email protected]>,Shaw Nick Dr (RQ3) BCH <[email protected]>, Hogler Wolfgang (RQ3) BCH <[email protected]>, Ken Poole <[email protected]>, [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], Christine Hall <[email protected]>, [email protected], "Blair Ed (RTH) OUH" <[email protected]>, "Shears Debbie (RTH) OUH" <[email protected]>, [email protected], [email protected], Terry Aspray <[email protected]> [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], Cristina Ponte <[email protected]>, [email protected], [email protected], "boyde, alan" <[email protected]>, [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], Moira Cheung <[email protected]>, Dyfrig Hughes <[email protected]>, [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], Senniappan Senthil <[email protected]>, "Anthony J. (Prof.) Brookes" <[email protected]>, Irving Melita <[email protected]>, Clinical Medicine EM Clark <[email protected]>, andrew price <[email protected]>, Sion Glyn-Jones <[email protected]>, [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], Andrew Wilkie <[email protected]>, "Cranston Treena (RTH) OUH" <[email protected]>, Harriet Teare <[email protected]>, Jane Kaye <[email protected]>, [email protected], Jon Palmer <[email protected]>, Rafael Pinedo-Villanueva <[email protected]>, [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected],[email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], "M.P. Snead" <[email protected]>, [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected]. [email protected], Elaine Dennison <[email protected]>, [email protected], [email protected], Daniel Perry <[email protected]>
Osaka
K Kato
M Kokado
IOF CtF CSA
K Akesson
P Mitchell
M Edwards
S Goemaere
T Thomas
WF Lems
D O'Gradaigh
M Schneider
Dominique Pierroz
C Cooper
31, 000 hip fractures 155, 000 fragility fractures /yr Over 5 yrs 28,600 fewer fractures £28million saving
250 hip fractures 1,150 fragility fractures / yr Over 5 years 230 fewer fracture (96 hips) £230,000 saving per year > x2 0.6 WTE nurses + 0.5 admin